My cousin and her husband were having marital difficulties and then her mom moved in. My cousin's husband moved out and they are now divorced. I know things were far from perfect but I can't help but wonder if her mom did not move in, if things would have been different.
This is now the second case I have heard of parents moving in and spouses moving out. Is this happening more frequently as adult children are becoming care givers at an increased rate?
Please DO keep your own place!!!!!!! Even if you end up renting or subletting it to someone while you move in with BF to see how things go for a period of time.
BF's situation sounds like it's headed for some jagged rocks, unless BF seeks help caring for Mom. It could easily pull you down, and anyone else who might be vulnerable and too close to it to remain objective, too.
Keep your wits about you. Always have a "Plan B". Be informed.
Keep looking for potential things that can help BF deal with his situation better--that's supportive, too.
You can be supportive and loving to others AND take care of you first, without allowing yourself to get pulled down into other's miseries.
It's about learning how to set reasonable, rational, realistic limits on other's use of you [your energy, time, resources], while taking care of your basic needs.
Framing what's needed in terms lot long-term/big picture, is Prudent.
BF maybe could be reading AgingCare posts and situations.
Some of us never discovered this resource until too late into our situations.
This site/people posting are tremendously informative and supportive.
With all that gets posted on this site, one could avoid many pitfalls, just by reading through things and taking some of them to heart.
Or, has she had dependent or other dysfunctional behaviors for a lifetime?
Handling all our stuff AND Mom's stuff, was waaaaayyy too much.
It was killing me. It did almost caused divorced, for sure.
Mom's stuff almost got us evicted too.
Guilt trips? It was way beyond 'just guilt trips', here.
ANY relationship or family problems WILL magnify when under pressure from caregiving...it's up to those in the relationship to work on maintaining the relationship. It's hard, unremitting work! Choices must be made. It WILL be emotionally draining.
Be supportive, caring, AND...
==Get some counseling.
==Contact your nearest Area Agency on Aging to learn what other resources might be found that could help.
==IF she is not yet under your BF's roof, counsel BF to avoid allowing Mom to live under his roof, NOR moving into Mom's house. That complicates things terribly, and further puts him at risk in a number of ways---you too, if you live with him.
==Focus on priorities:
Immediate family unit is #1, especially if there are children.
Caring for elders and others, is #2; sometimes those vie for #1.
NO relationship, no individual, no matter how stellar, well educated or trained, is equipped to handle the complicated behaviors certain dependent, behaviorally destructive elders can wreak, and maintain health and sanity. Especially not 24/7.
It's UNrealistic for one person to expect another to be their "everything". Especially not anything close to 24/7.
Most folks have a hard time doing that level of intense relationship even a few hours a day.
Dependence-mode-behaviors = the expectation that someone will gaze into their eyes all the time, be at beck-and-call, be at their side, 'Go-fer" everything, be their only friend & companion; the dependent person sucking the caregiver into their strange thought processes: dependent-mode people of any age, get terribly anxious & act-out badly if they don't get that...they seriously believe they can't survive without all that--it IS survival mode for them, that's why they act-out so badly.
An individual can't survive too much of that--it's not normal; it will wear them to a frazzle.
It's one thing to care for a child doing that--those can learn differently.
It's harder to caregive an elder doing it--they can't get better--only worse.
A relationship, especially one recently started, would have a hard time surviving that, too.
The brother who died taking care of this mother---gotta wonder---how much of his demise was related to the stress of living as a martyr to Mom's behaviors? Could that happen to your BF, too?
IF she might be capable of making some choice at all [very questionable in dementia], MAYbe present her a limited choice, like:
"Mom, it's impossible for me to take full-time care of you. I've looked into Care Homes and found a very good one, OR, there are in-home caregivers that would allow you to stay in your home longer. Either way, I can still visit you. Which would you prefer, the Care Home or the In-Home care staff? "
[[BTW, she WILL likely pit one caregiver against another---that's classic---be ready: keep in close, clear communication with staff about it, or she'll tear ya'll to bits, losing good staff--that applies to family members, too.]]
IF caregivers in-home, find MULTIPLE caregivers for Mom--so they can rotate shifts--otherwise they will get burned-out; you'll lose them & be back where you started.
==Does BF have DPOA for taking care of Mom? If not, why not?
If Mom is diagnosed as demented, she is less capable, or not capable, of making good decisions.
The DPOA is legally allowed to make necessary decisions for someone who can't make rational decisions.
Mom's DPOA needs to make those for her now ---whether she likes it or not---to ensure Mom has care she needs--even if she can't understand that she needs it, or dislikes the decision.
Confused elders & children have limited ability to understand things.
The best way to love her now, is to be the loving, caring grownup one is, by making the hard decisions that must be made, to make sure Mom is safe & properly cared for---AND maintaining the health & well-being of the person[s] doing the caregiving.
Those decisions might not seem to make sense to Mom---yeah, it might make her angry, AND she may act-out badly--you might need help. ===The DPOA needs to get all the "ducks in a row" FIRST..
Other relatives or friends might not understand why a DPOA had to make certain choices, & might cause the DPOA grief, too--but they lack a full grasp of the situation as the DPOA who is right there.
==It's very important for caregivers to take good care of themselves, FIRST. Otherwise, they become useless as good caregivers.
==Do what you can to be supportive and encourage your BF to seek more help in caregiving his Mom--it sounds like he might be in over his head.
If that means finding a facility---even if Mom hates the idea---it might be the best decision for all.
Take care to find facilities that actually take good care of elders.
There are many levels of care choices, not just "nursing homes".
She may be fine in one of the "Continuing Care" places, designed to help an elder "age in place", ranging from complete independence in their own apartment, to full, 24/7 bed-care. Or, she might need a "memory care" place, that prevents her running away.
But don't wait too long. It only gets harder as her conditions get worse.
Avoid waiting for the terrible stress of catastrophe to make needed decisions.
It's better to be proactive, making wise decisions now--it's stress-relieving!
Regarding the wedding vows, your spouse has not vowed to disregard the needs of her parents and neither did you. A spouse's needs did come first when the parents were able to live with little to no help, but things have changed in their abilities due to illnesses or age. For now, for a decade or so, they will need to receive more of your spouses attention. She has not ceased to love you, but her love for her parents comes first when they are needy elders. They will pass away, she will likely return to waiting on your every need. But
for now you may wish to help out were possible rather than remind your wife
she is carrying a heavy load or housewife and full time caregiver.
I think this experience has made us closer, like we are a team. We work together well, and whenever my mil puts me down for serving a frozen dinner because I've had no time to cook from scratch, or being too exhausted to run the vacuum around, my hubby always sticks up for me and helps me a lot with the cooking and cleaning.
If something happened and I had to start over would I marry someone who was care giving for a loved with dementia? HELL NO!!! I been there and done that! But I would never turn my back on my husband or family..
at this pace, there will not be much time for your relationship with him. It might be best to back off the relationship until his mother has passed. She is 85 and in poor health and in say 5 yrs you may want to rekindle the relationship with an eye toward marriage. Marrying now will turn you into the secondary caregiver and I don't think that is a way to start a marriage. Most spouses who care for in-laws have been married for yrs or decades, have built up some kind of a positive relationship with their in-laws (and even then it is difficult). Frankly, caregiving is a skill which is much easier to do for your own parent or loved one (aunts uncles etc). For caregiving blood is thicker than water in most cases.
She is now in senior living. Only short come is no help with meds. Even tho I call in the mornings, seperate the morning from evening meds she frequently gets it wrong and sleeps all day. But I'm so thankful I don't have the 24/7 care. She won't hardly do anything for herself even there, so I still do a lot for her.
My marriage might have fallen apart anyway but the caregiving situation has not helped it.
Please be gentle with you--you had no way of knowing how things might turn out at any given time---all we can ever do, is make the best choices we can in the moment, to do the best we can at that time.
None of us know, exactly, how those choices will turn out--only, that we did the best we knew, then.
There's no wrong in making the best decisions you could at any given time.
No guilt!
The best we can do is hold each other gently in our hearts, unconditionally & compassionately, whether together or apart, & no matter how far apart.
{{hugs!}}
....will add greater strains/stresses to the partnership.
The stresses of having a dysfunctional other person in the home, just ratchets up stress--sometimes really epically.
IF your partner has been a good one, ya might wanna consider -keeping- that partner, over your elder [if one or the other has to get out from under your roof].
IF your partner has been big or constant problems before your elder moved in under your roof, -maybe- it's time to let the dysfunctional partner go.
Caretaking can be traumatic to the caregiver, yet might still end up a good thing. OTH, sometimes getting the elder moved OUT from under your roof, --no matter how traumatic the move-out is--can be a real blessing .
The experience of caretaking, whether under your roof, or while elder is in a facility or their home, always provides lessons.
And as someone mentioned above, caregiving -REALLY- lets the caregiver know, without any doubts, who their true allies are!
Seems like, the greater and longer an elder has dysfunctional before needing any level of caretaking, MAY be a predictor of how screwed up the family members get, over issues that develop during caretaking that elder.
For "special" elders, who have actively avoided being diagnosed or properly assisted all their lives, ---their adult kids REALLY need to stick together---,
or that elder WILL shred whatever's left of family relations.
Unfortunately, those will likely be the adult kids who fail most, to be supportive of each other;
they have been adversely affected by the disturbed parent[s] all their lives--and lack some or all functional family skills themselves: these become easiest targets for a dysfunctional elder messing their minds and emotions.
By the time [IF] those adult kids figure out what the elder has been doing
--IF they ever do---it's too late---they either point at one or more siblings believing it's their fault,
or, one or more will separate from the rest, to protect themselves from further harm from siblings who believed lies their elder told---
Dysfunctional Elders often do ANYTHING to keep control over things; consequences of their words and actions never occur to them,
OR, they are so anguished /guilty at their own inability to control their own behaviors, that they cannot admit to anyone what they did--which blocks any reconciliation happening.
Then it gets to be too late.
Moral of story? Put legal and other ducks in a row -before- needs arise.
Waiting for a crisis to happen to handle things then, makes a bad situation so much worse.
But she doesn't want to cause marriage problems. She had been thin most of her life and is now 20 pounds under a good weight, but says she doesn't get hungry. The only time she eats good is when I go and entertain her while she eats. We would bicker and fuss and disagree about everything if she lived with me. (where do you go, who did you see, why were you gone so long, you left me alone too long. Etc.). To do this right I need to find someone who will visit her twice a day or at least once a day. She keeps messing up her night meds and taking them morning and night. I call and discribe which ones and what day it is and she STILL takes the wrong one. She can't keep it clear to follow the days on the pill box. She has a morning box and one with NIGHT in big letters. Can't get it right when I open the box and say take the ones I'm the open box.
We've come a very long way in 5 months, but had a year of trying to get her moved closer to me. She needed it far worse than we could see just visiting one or twice a WEEK. Every story is unique.
I cleaned out her dresser drawers and brought her winter things home with me so only what she needed is visible. I spent 4 hours with her yesterday and hoped to be with my husband today, but still spent two hours with her. I feel like my husband wished I could stay home today also. I'm hoping my caregiving doesn't come between us, But am also determined to not let that happen. She can't afford a NH. she gets $1188. a month from SS. A nice NH here in St. Louis is $3,000 to $6000.00. We are helping to pay for her rent now to make her savings last longer.
One day at a time.